Thursday, October 30, 2014

He and I are certainly on the same page when it comes to
keeping the discussion all “about the history.” I was further relieved by Levin’s
admission that, “I agree with Jimmy that many of the comments that followed the
post are troubling for the reasons he cites.”

After these preliminaries, Levin rehashed his objections to
the video in question, stating that “the views of the three individuals in this
video ought to be taken on their own merit and I find them lacking in certain
ways.”

Fair enough.

As I made abundantly clear, I also found the video lacking
and based my objections on the tone of the post and its commenters.

Predictably, some of those commenters chimed in with some unfortunate
remarks that make me question if they even bothered to read my original post or
if they just responded to Levin’s summation.

One person stated: “Mr. Price implies that a non-Chrsitian,
or anti-Christian consensus dominates the discussion of Civil War history, as
though this field has become the particular province of who? Jews, atheists,
and Wiccans?”

Unfortunately, I cannot answer this question because I
implied no such thing in the first place.

Another commenter proclaimed that “some Christians are
beginning to adopt the SCV’s ‘looking for victimhood’ mode of operation. Just
as it is wrong for any group to be pilloried based on vague generalizations, it
is equally wrong for any group to interpret any criticism as an unfair attack on
their beliefs.”

If this person was referring specifically to me, I defy them
to find one scintilla of this victim mentality in any of my published work.

I won’t hold my breath.

Conversely, an anonymous commenter here at Freedom by the
Sword said that they “tried to respond the one of Harrigan’s comments at
Levin’s blog, but was censored.” If true, this is troubling.

In sum, my objections from the start were purely in regards
to the hostile tone and some of the alarming insularity on display in Levin's original post. Any speculation beyond that misses the point entirely.

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

In our increasingly polarized society there seems to have
been a shift from a “live and let live” mentality to a vigorous prosecution of
“thought crime” – no longer can we agree to disagree, but anyone who strays
from what is considered the cultural mainstream is called out and proverbially
tarred and feathered for not keeping in lockstep with the rest of us.

This creeps into the Civil War history community from time
to time, usually in fairly innocuous ways. While I’m used to the usual back and
forth about the merits of the newest ACW titles or the constant drumroll of
snarky comments related to the latest gaffes of the “heritage” movement, I was
more than a little troubled by the tone of a recent post over at Civil War Memory that features members of the history department of Liberty University.

The video explores the “enduring legacies” of the American
Civil War and was put on Vimeo by an L.U. film student who apparently asked
different members of the faculty to describe what they imagine to be the war’s
major legacies.

Levin states that the video is “just all around really bad,”
and if he is referring to the overall watchability and quality of the film, I’m
with him (but keep in mind this is the result of an undergrad film project, for
crying out loud). But the vitriol aimed by Levin and the dozens of folks who
took the time to leave their own acerbic musings is aimed at what the
professors interviewed in the film said about how the war still affects the
country to this day.

It would be one thing if these professors were wearing Dixie
Outfitters shirts and talking about how tariffs were the real cause of the war
and that slavery had nothing to do with it. But the views espoused by the
faculty were not terribly out of the mainstream. Certainly not ideal or
complete, but we aren’t even privy to everything these people said to the film
student during the interviews.

For this reason I’m willing to give them the benefit of the
doubt, but not so with Levin and his cohorts. For instance, Prof. Robert
Ritchie is scorned for reducing “the war down to sectional differences.” Not
exactly League of the South type stuff here.

Or consider Prof. Chris Jones, who said that slavery was the
main cause of the war but goes on to say that modern Americans are being “enslaved”
by the Federal government. He also cites a recent Reuters/Ipsos poll that
states that the idea of secession is still popular in today’s modern political
climate. That might not be your particular outlook on life, but it’s not a
harebrained conspiracy theory.

All of this leads to a dubious claim that these professors
make the causes and impact of the Civil War “impossible to understand.”

And the comments? Wow.

Rather than attack what these professors actually said about
the war, the commenters (not Levin himself) launch into a diatribe about the credibility
of Liberty University itself. James Harrigan, who teaches at UVA, says Liberty
is “not an actual university” while commenters on the blog and the blog’s Facebook
page chime in with comments calling L.U. a “fake school” and suggesting that
the professors quoted got their PhDs from the University of Phoenix. See the
original post for more of this lowbrow fare.

I can personally attest that these representations are not
accurate because I actually spent two years at Liberty University from 1998 –
2000 and during that time I took two Civil War courses. One was a survey course
which had as its main text McPherson’s Ordeal
by Fire and also included Thomas’s Confederacy
as a Revolutionary Experience. Nothing by Clyde Wilson, sad to say.

The other course was a Civil War literature class taught by
Kenneth Rowlette (who also runs the university’s well-regarded National Civil War Chaplains Museum) with readings that included Ambrose Bierce and Stephen Crane and more
recent books such as Cold Mountain and Jacob's Ladder.

Can you just smell
the vast Christian Right conspiracy? Somebody call the mayor of Houston!

I digress.

The point is that in no time during my two years at L.U. did
I encounter the crude caricatures envisaged in these comments.

It is unfortunate that Christians are increasingly lampooned
as science-hating mindless sycophants who have no place in a discussion about
history. I’m not implying that that is what Levin was going for, but the
feeding frenzy that ensued shows that he certainly left the door open for what
passes as civil discourse nowadays.

I can think of several Christians, such as Steven E. Woodworth (who also happens to be part of Liberty University’s distinguished adjunct
faculty) and Robert Tracy McKenzie, professor and chair of the Department of
History at Wheaton College, who maintains the excellent Faith & History blog, who have made stellar contributions to Civil War history.

To quote another Christian historian, John Fea, “We live in
a sound-bite culture that makes it difficult to have any sustained dialogue on
these historical issues.”

It is especially difficult for this dialogue to take place when
you’re pre-judged by your religious views.

Friday, September 26, 2014

Well hello there, sorry for falling off the face of the
planet (again)! I do have a decent excuse, though – over the past three months
I’ve been putting the finishing touches on my second book.

So even though this post is primarily about New Market
Heights, take a quick minute and order a copy of The Battle of First Deep Bottom (don’t worry, the Federals attack the New Market Line in this one too…they
just lose.)

Now that I’ve got those preliminaries out of the way, a
quick look at the calendar will tell you that this Monday is the 150th
anniversary of the Battle of New Market Heights. As you may have heard, Henrico
County is holding a re-enactment of New Market Heights and other actions
that took place north of the James this weekend! I’ll be there tomorrow and Sunday selling and signing books,
and the county was even kind enough to give me a whopping 30 minutes to speak
about the battle tomorrow afternoon at 2:15 p.m.

Then, once the weekend is over, I’ll be helping lead
real-time tours of the core battlefield on Monday morning September 29th.
These 2-hour tours will begin at 6:00 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.

Needless to say, I’m ecstatic that New Market Heights is receiving
this amount of attention and I’m cautiously optimistic that these events will
help raise attention about the heroes on both sides who fought there and maybe
even generate some public outcry about the current plans to turn the battlefield
into a community college.

I hope you’ll take the time to come on out to a unique Civil
War battle re-enactment and a very rare opportunity to walk on the hallowed ground
where 14 African American Union soldiers won the Medal of Honor.

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

This Friday, June 20th, I will be speaking at the
“Campaign Before Richmond Symposium” at Deep Bottom Park. The event will be
held in a large tent near the historic site of the Deep Bottom bridgehead on
the 150th anniversary of when it was established, so this is a unique
opportunity to learn more about Grant’s famous “double-enders” on the site from
which they were launched.

Monday, May 19, 2014

Well, tonight at the site of the Harris Farm the
commemoration of the Battles of the Wilderness and Spotsylvania Court House
will come to an end. While I wish I had been able to attend more of the
commemorative events, those I did have the pleasure of going to or helping to
lead seemed appropriately somber and very well done.

I tend to fall into the camp of folks who believe that
battlefields are no more or less hallowed on the anniversaries of when the
battle took place versus any other given day. And, being blessed to live so
near these fields of honor and horror, I have the privilege of communing with
these sites whenever I wish.

Thus, I will leave the analysis of which tours were the best
and which events were the most moving to those whose participation exceeded my
own.

However...

As some of you know, my other main area of study other than
the American Civil War is the First World War, and I recently came across a
quote from a book on that tragic topic that resonated with my inner reactions to the photographs that kept
showing up on my Facebook page of hundreds of people crossing fields and
forests that were once drenched with blood.

I leave this quote not as a criticism of others, but as a
caution to myself:

“I fear I’d fallen victim to the exuberant nihilism of the
battlefield enthusiast, and that soon I would be whooping with joy at coming
across a trench in the forest, or a skeleton behind a barn. There is a sort of
macho romance to the futility of war, an attraction to seeing things fall apart,
born of the same impulse that makes setting fires or watching the wrecker’s
ball such a fun pastime for so many men.” – Stephen O’Shea, Back to the Front:An Accidental Historian Walks the Trenches of World War I

Saturday, May 10, 2014

In the predawn darkness of May 9, 1864 Sheridan’s entire
corps mounted and set out on their mission to take out J.E.B. Stuart and the
cavalry of the Army of Northern Virginia. Little Phil was taking his entire
force with him, leaving no horse soldiers behind to help Grant at Spotsylvania Court
House.

The corps created quite the spectacle, with a column that stretched
13 miles and took 4 hours to pass. One trooper recalled how “The clouds of
dust, sent up by the thousands of hoofbeats, fill eyes, nose, and air passages,
give external surfaces a uniform, dirty gray color, and form such an
impenetrable veil, that, for many minutes together, you cannot see even your
hand before you.”

The early part of the march was also the most dangerous, as
the Yankee horsemen had to pass around Lee’s army before heading south. Four
small rivers – the Ni, Po, Ta, and Mat – stood in their way, and the thought of
being caught in the middle of crossing one of these streams gnawed away at
Sheridan. When the last trooper rode his horse across the Mat, Sheridan found
that “all anxiety as to our passing around Lee’s army was removed.”

While the corps crossed these streams unmolested, it did not
go unnoticed, and Confederate scouts reported on Sheridan’s movements, with
word reaching Robert E. Lee by 8:00 a.m. Since Wade Hampton and Fitzhugh Lee
were still entangled with the Federal infantry, it fell to Williams C. Wickham
to keep an eye on the Yankees and tentatively pursue. Wickham’s cavaliers tangled with Sheridan’s rear guard at
Jerrell’s Mill and Mitchell’s Shop, but the blue juggernaut kept moving at a
steady pace.

When Sheridan’s column reached Chilesburg, the main body of
Union cavalry camped on the north bank of the North Anna River, while George
Armstrong Custer took his brigade and elements of Devin’s troopers over the
river and on towards Beaver Dam Station on the Virginia Central Railroad.

Beaver Dam Station as it appeared in the early 20th Century.
The station was rebuilt in 1866.

Beaver Dam Station was named for the plantation of Col.
Edmund Fontaine, once a president of the Virginia Central. The plantation itself was
named for the creek which bisected it, and it just so happened that Flora Cooke
Stuart – J.E.B. Stuart’s wife – was staying there at the time.

As darkness fell on May 9th, a thunder storm moved into the
area. Custer’s men moved up to the station and encountered a large number of
prisoners who had been captured at the Wilderness and Laurel Hill.

Custer’s men quickly neutralized the guards and liberated 278
prisoners. In addition to the prisoners, the Yankees captured 200,000 pounds of
bacon, 1.5 million rations, and nearly all of the medical supplies for the Army
of Northern Virginia.

After taking everything they could carry, they set fire to
the buildings, derailed the trains, and tore up track for 10 miles in each
direction. While this orgy of destruction was taking place, 150 troopers of the
Confederate 1st Maryland Battalion charged in and rode around, shooting the
place up before withdrawing.

While Stuart's men swept past Beaver Dam in pursuit of Sheridan,
Stuart was able to have a quick visit with his wife.
So quick, in fact, that he didn't even get off his horse.

In the morning, Sheridan’s men began to move again. From
Beaver Dam, the route of march ran down to the settlement of Negro Foot and
then on to Mountain Road, which crossed the South Anna and continued to
Telegraph Road 6 miles above Richmond.

Sheridan later touted the importance of taking Beaver Dam
Station: “The possession of Beaver Dam gave us an important point, as it opened
a way toward Richmond on the Negro-foot road. It also enabled us to obtain
forage for our well-nigh famished animals, and to prepare for fighting the
enemy, who, I felt sure, would endeavor to interpose between my column and
Richmond.”

Late in the morning of the 10th, Sheridan assembled the corps near
Beaver Dam. As the Federals pulled out, some of Wickham’s men rode in and
rounded up some prisoners – including someunfortunates who had just been
liberated by Custer on May 9th.

By this point, Stuart united Wickham, Lomax, and the mounted James B. Gordon's Tarheels below Beaver Dam. Desperate to stop Sheridan before
he reached Richmond, Stuart formulated a plan – he would try to ambush the
Federals near Richmond, where Confederate infantry could theoretically come to
his support. Thus, he divided his force: Gordon was tasked with following
Sheridan and harassing his rear guard while Fitz Lee , with Wickham and Lomax, would
hurry east to Hanover Junction and then descend Telegraph Road to intercept the
main Federal body at the Mountain Road junction.

Fitz Lee later described the situation: “Discovering
Richmond to be the object of the enemy, and knowing the entire absence of
troops in the works guarding the western side, General Stuart determined to
move upon the chord of the arc the enemy were advancing upon, and by
outmarching them interpose our little force in the enemy’s front at some point
contiguous to the city.”

Thursday, May 8, 2014

150 years ago today, the violent explosion of two of the
biggest tempers in the Army of the Potomac led to a massive mounted raid that,
among other things, killed the talented Confederate cavalry chieftain J.E.B.
Stuart.

After a month in charge of the Army of the Potomac’s
cavalry, 33-year-old Philip H. Sheridan reached a boiling point with
48-year-old Army of the Potomac commander George Gordon Meade. The dispute arose
over the proper use of the army’s mounted forces and had been simmering beneath
the surface from day one of Sheridan’s tenure in command of the Cavalry Corps.

Maj. Gen. Philip H. Sheridan

When Sheridan took command of the cavalry in late March of
1864, he immediately took issue with the way it was being utilized. The feisty
young Irishman was dismayed at the poor condition of the horses, which were
tired out from conducting extensive mounted patrols. Within weeks, Sheridan
told Meade that this use of the cavalry was “both burdensome and wasteful” and
suggested his troopers “ought to be kept concentrated to fight the enemy’s cavalry.”

Meade did not appreciate the free advice and used the cavalry
as he pleased when fighting broke out in the Wilderness. He had assigned two of
Sheridan’s three divisions to guard the trains that accompanied the army, and
after a disappointing performance at Todd’s Tavern, both generals were ready to
brawl. The “goggly-eyed snapping turtle”
was angry at Sheridan’s failure to clear Brock Road while Little Phil was angry
at Meade for not supporting Wilson’s Division when it was the lone occupant of
Spotsylvania Court House.

Before noon on May 8th, the time was ripe for the
two men to unleash their pent up fury. Sheridan burst into Meade’s headquarters
tent and lit into Meade. Lt. Col. Theodore Lyman gives the following account:

11:40 A.M. … Sheridan came now to
Headquarters – we were at dinner. Meade told him sharply that his cavalry was
in the way, though he had sent him orders to leave the road clear. S[heridan]
replied that he never got the order. Meade then apologized, but Sheridan was
plainly full of suppressed anger, and Meade too was in ill temper, S[heridan]
went on to say that he could see nothing
to oppose the advance of the 5th Corps; that the behavior of the
infantry was disgraceful &c. &c.

Sheridan went on to tell Meade that “such disjointed
operations as he had been requiring of the cavalry for the last four days would
render the corps inefficient and useless before long.” When Meade mentioned the
danger posed by J.E.B. Stuart’s fabled Confederate horsemen, Sheridan brushed
this off by boasting “Damn Stuart, I can thrash hell out of him any day.”

Sheridan stomped out of the tent, still steaming, and Meade figured
he had better report the conversation to Grant. When Grant heard Meade recount
Sheridan’s boast of being able to best Stuart, he gave his friend from the
Western Theater permission to take his entire corps out to give it a try.

The orders were issued at 1PM and stated in part that “the
major-general commanding directs you to immediately concentrate your available
mounted force, and with your ammunition trains and such supply trains as are
filled proceed against the enemy’s cavalry.” In addition to thrashing Stuart, Grant
was also hoping that Sheridan would live off the land and ease the burden of
supply on his army.

That evening, Sheridan summoned his division commanders –
Brig. Gen. Wesley Merritt, Brig. Gen. David McM. Gregg, and Brig. Gen. James
H. Wilson – to the Alrich Farm in Spotsylvania. He told them: “We are going out
to fight Stuart’s cavalry in consequence of a suggestion from me. We will give
him a fair, square fight. We are strong, and I know we can beat him, and in
view of my recent representations to General Meade I shall expect nothing but
success.” Initially, Merritt, Gregg, and Wilson were startled – it was
virtually unheard of for the Army of the Potomac’s cavalry to go on the
offensive! They soon bought into the idea when their new commander laid out his
plan.

Sheridan planned to head south for Richmond, knowing that
Stuart would have to follow him if he threatened the Confederate capital. When his supplies gave out, he planned to
resupply from the Army of the James at Bermuda Hundred. His main goal in all of
this was to draw Stuart into a battle that would wreck the Confederate mounted
arm.

That night the troopers prepared for their great raid – each trooper
was given 50 rounds of ammo and 18 pistol rounds. Three days' rations of coffee,
sugar, and hardtack were issued. One days' ration of beef and five days' worth of
salt were also issued. Wagons were kept to a minimum and only ammunition was taken.

James Avery of the 5th Michigan Cavalry recalled,
“That night we got little rest for the rumble and rattle of wagons and
artillery as they passed along the stony street, disturbed our slumber, and
besides this, the band struck up around twelve o’clock, which added to the din.”
The troopers would be awakened and moving south before daylight.

The next day J.E.B. Stuart would learn of the raid and when
he found out which direction they were heading, he took about 2,500 of his
finest troopers on a hell-for-leather ride to intercept them.

Friday, April 25, 2014

Well, it’s hard to believe, but we only have 16 days until
the Yellow Tavern Commemorative Bus Tour on Sunday May 11th! I will
be tackling half of the tour along with Sam McKelvey, the Site Manager for
Dabbs House and Walkerton Tavern in Henrico County.

We have poured many hours of research into this tour, doing
everything from driving the original route numerous times to consulting with
experts such as Bobby Krick and Eric Wittenberg to make sure that the
interpretations that we will be giving are as accurate as possible.

And if that doesn't convince you to come, consider that
tickets are only $20 per person and include lunch!

Here are the details:

The bus tour will begin promptly at 9 am so please try to
arrive a few minutes early. The meeting point/parking for the tour will be at
the Confederate Fortifications on Brook Road. The address to the adjacent
Martin's Grocery Store is 5700 Brook Road Henrico, VA 23227. You will see a
large tour bus parked by the fortification.

The tour itself will be a mix of "on-bus"
interpretation and scheduled debarkation stops. No hard exertion is expected
but please bring comfortable shoes for short periods of walking and longer periods
of standing. A box lunch will be provided.

Basic Schedule (Subject to Change)

9:00- Leave Confederate fortifications

9:45-10:15 Beaverdam Station

10:15-10:45 The march to Richmond (on bus)

10:45-11-15 Action around Ground Squirrel Bridge

11:30-12 Lunch at Walkerton Tavern and actions on Mountain
Road

12:15-12:45 Mid-day action at Yellow Tavern

1-1:45- Culmination of the Battle and the wounding of
General Stuart

2-2:30- May 12 action and final thoughts

2:30- Program concludes back at the Confederate
fortification

The program will conclude early enough for those interested
in visiting the United Daughters of the Confederacy's Commemorative 3 p.m.
program at the J.E.B. Stuart Monument. If you have any questions on the morning
of the tour, a scheduled staff member will be available by phone at the Dabbs House Museum beginning at 8 am. The number for the museum is 804-652-3406.

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

While I realize things have been a bit slow here over the
past few weeks, I wanted to make you aware of some random bits of news that
need to be brought to your attention.

At the top of the list is a new blog from my friend Hampton
Newsome, author of the excellent Richmond Must Fall and co-editor of Civil War Talks, both of which you should immediately add to your bookshelf if you haven’t
already done so. His blog can be found here, and from the looks of things it
will be one that you will want to check in with regularly.

And while I’m on the topic of work, there will be two bus tours that I will be leading or helping to lead with Prince William County that
are shaping up to be very special. On Saturday May 3rd I will be
leading an all-day bus tour of Arlington Cemetery in honor of the 150th
anniversary of its founding. The tour will include a tour of Robert E. Lee’s
Arlington House and a driving tour that will highlight some of the notable
burials within the cemetery. Along the way you will learn about lesser-known
aspects of Arlington’s history such as Freedman’s Village, where former slaves
experienced their first taste of freedom. Also, on June 14th I will
be helping to lead a bus tour that will focus on the contributions of U.S.
Colored Troops during the Richmond-Petersburg Campaign. The tour will focus on
the initial clashes around Petersburg, the Crater, and will culminate in a tour
of New Market Heights. Both tours are $80 per person (lunch included) and
require reservations. For reservations, call Ben Lomond Historic Site at
703-367-7872.

Finally, on a more humorous note, a co-worker sent me this
video of Stonewall Jackson planning a famous flank attack that must have been influenced
by someone reading about the Seven Days Battles. Dick Ewell and A.P. Hill
would undoubtedly have approved.

Friday, February 21, 2014

Anyone who has done research on United States Colored Troops
will tell you that finding an original letter or diary from an African American
Union soldier is akin to the discovery of Noah’s Ark. Primary documents from
USCTs are scarce, which makes the diary of William P. Woodlin, held in the
collection of the Gilder-Lehrman Institute, a truly remarkable document. Woodlin belonged to the band of the 8th Regiment, U.S. Colored
Infantry and accompanied the rest of the regiment on its expedition to Florida.
He was present at Olustee, the 150th anniversary of which was
commemorated yesterday.

Woodlin's Diary. GLIAH

To recap, the Battle of Olustee was fought near Lake City,
Florida, on February 20, 1864. It was the largest battle fought in Florida
during the Civil War. In February 1864, the commander of the Department of the
South, Maj. Gen. Quincy A. Gillmore, launched an expedition into Florida to
secure Union enclaves, sever Confederate supply routes, and recruit black
soldiers. Brig. Gen. Truman Seymour moved deep into the state and on February
20, his men met Brig. Gen. Joseph Finegan's Confederates entrenched near
Olustee. The federal forces attacked but were repulsed and fled to
Jacksonville. Union forces of more than
5,000 men included the 8th USCT, the 35th USCT and the 54th Mass. Federal forces suffered 40 percent killed,
wounded, or missing.

When the day was over, Woodlin took up his pencil and
scrawled the following in his diary:

20th We rec'd our
rations last evening and got underway about ½ past 6 A.M. at a quick step on
the left of the division, passed Sanders Station about 11 A.M., about 12 m: {as
near as could be learned} from B's Plantation; we had a very rapid as well as
fatiguing march; passed through a dead turpentine forest. after this halt we were ordered forward,
& soon could hear the roar of Canon & the rattle of Musketry ahead
of us, we were hurried up to the line of battle at the double quick and our Reg
was place in the center and rec'd the hottest fire that was given ; The
Col. fell the Major wounded a Capt, & several lieutenants. the band and Drum Core went up to the front
ahead of the Cavalry and were exposed to a very hot fire: for a while when we fell back to the R. R.
until we were in danger of being taken by a flank movement of the Rebs: we got away however and had another station
for a while: when we were again move a mile farther from the Battle field, which was in the front of Lake
City. we built some fires there, &
were halted by the Division Dr. for a while after which we moved on untill we
reached the station. we left in the
morning & PM blew the scene of action nearly worn out with fatigue
& cold. we reached there about 1
A.M. that night and stayed untill daylight.

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Well hello there! I apologize for the prolonged absence, but
life and work have eaten up the majority of my time as of late. Still, even
though there hasn’t been much activity on the blog, I have been hard at work on
some projects and events that I thought I’d bring you up to speed on.

If you live in the
Manassas area, I will be giving a lecture and book signing next Thursday (February 27th) about New Market
Heights at the Old Manassas Courthouse at 7 PM. The Old Manassas Courthouse was
the site of the 1911 Peace Jubilee, so it is a great setting for a talk on the
Civil War.

I was also supremely honored to be invited to speak to the Union League of Philadelphia’s Civil War Round Table about New Market Heights on September
24th. As you may recall, the Union League houses the original Don Troiani painting
Three Medals of Honor as well as many other priceless works, so I am eagerly
anticipating being able to soak in the atmosphere of this legendary site!

From Philly, I will turn my gaze south to Henrico County where I will participate in a whole host of commemorative activities put on by
the County and Richmond National Battlefield in honor of the 150th
anniversary of the fighting around Chaffin’s Farm. As you may have heard, from
September 26 – 28 Henrico County will be hosting a re-enactment of New Market Heights
and Second Deep Bottom called Campaign Before Richmond 1864. I’ll be bouncing
back and forth between the re-enactment and the events taking place at Fort
Harrison and then I’ll be giving real-time walking tours of the New Market Heights
Battlefield on the actual anniversary. Needless to say, I will be in serious
need of a vacation by October 1st!

And speaking of Henrico County, I also wanted to let you all
know that I will be helping the county’s Historic Preservation & Museum
Services Division give what looks to be the only commemorative tour related to the Battle of Yellow Tavern, where legendary Confederate cavalier J.E.B. Stuart
was mortally wounded. This will be an all-day bus tour on the actual anniversary
(Sunday May 11, 2014) and will cover sites such as Beaverdam Station, Ground
Squirrel Bridge, Walkerton Tavern, and the site of Stuart’s wounding among
others. Check the county’s even website for updates on how you can be a part of
this once-in-a-lifetime event!While this is certainly enough to keep any mortal busy, I am
also putting the finishing touches on my second book, which will cover the
First Battle of Deep Bottom. Fingers crossed, it should be out in time for the anniversary.

I have tried to keep up with other Civil War news and chatter
from around the blogosphere (as long as it doesn't relate to the Virginia
Flaggers – I’m OVER it) but the above-mentioned concerns have kept me from devoting as much time as I’d like. I did notice that there was some hub-bub
over Dr. Allen C. Guelzo being the co-winner of the Lincoln Prize, but since I
don’t subscribe to the fallacious notion that Gettysburg was the most important
end-all-be-all crucial high water mark in all of Western civilization…I don’t
really care. Congrats to Dr. Guelzo!I’ll check back in tomorrow with a post on the 150th
Anniversary of the Battle of Olustee...

Saturday, February 15, 2014

NOTE: This post originally appeared on The Sable Arm on February 20, 2011. It has been reposted in honor of the 150th Anniversary of the Battle of Olustee.

Thus was described the Battle of Olustee, fought on February
20, 1864, by a quick-witted officer in Co. K, 7th Connecticut Infantry. While
the battle itself was not one of the finer military exploits produced by the
Union war effort during the American Civil War, it did display the fighting
prowess of the African American soldiers who fought there.

In early 1864, Federal forces launched their largest
military operation in Florida that was a result of both political and military
considerations. With the presidential election coming up in November the
Republicans hoped to organize a loyal Florida government in time to send
delegates to the Republican nominating convention. In addition to the political
objectives Major General Quincy Gillmore, stated that the expedition was
necessary to “procure an outlet for cotton, lumber, Timber, Turpentine, and the
other products of the State… cut off one of the enemy's sources of commissary
supplies.”

In February, 1864 Gillmore received approval for his plans
to occupy Jacksonville with a large force and to extend Federal operations over
much of northeast Florida. About 6,000 troops from Gillmore's Department of the
South were selected for the operation and on February 7th these troops took
Jacksonville. One week later Gillmore met with his subordinate, Truman Seymour
who was not held in the highest of esteem by his men. One soldier later
described the situation: “The Florida expedition was intrusted to the command
of General Truman Seymour, considered by more than the rank and file, as an
eccentric West Point crank who aped only Napoleon in prowling around camps at
night to watch the men on duty, but he lacked the genius of his prototype in
the performance of his own duty.”

Gillmore ordered that defensive works be constructed and
appointed Seymour commander of the newly-created District of Florida. On
February 19 he assembled his troops in preparation for a movement against the
Confederates the next day.

The next day saw confused fighting and when some of
Seymour’s white units broke, he sent in the untried men of the 8th United
States Colored Troops. The 8th had trained at Camp William Penn in Pennsylvania
but had “little practice in loading and firing” their weapons, according to the
regimental surgeon. Lt. Oliver Norton of the 8th recalled that after standing
up to the murderous fire, his men had to withdraw:

As the men fell back they gathered in groups like frightened
sheep, and it was almost impossible to keep them from doing so. Into these
groups the rebels poured the deadliest fire, almost every bullet hitting some
one. Color bearer after color bearer was shot down and the colors seized by
another. Behind us was a battery that was wretchedly managed. They had but
little ammunition, but after firing that, they made no effort to get away with
their pieces, but busied themselves in trying to keep us in front of them.
Lieutenant Lewis seized the colors and planted them by a gun and tried to rally
his men round them, but forgetting them for the moment, they were left there,
and the battery was captured and our colors with it.

Around this time the two units that were bringing up the
rear – the 54th Massachusetts and the 1st North Carolina Colored Volunteers
(35th USCT) – arrived on the scene. The 54th raised its sarcastic battle cry
“Three cheers for Massachusetts and seven dollars a month!” and went on line.
One eyewitness said that they “fought like tigers” while the 1st NCCV “went up
into the field, halting and firing fiercely, with its right well forward, so as
to form an angle of…120 degrees with the line of the Fifty-Fourth.” With the
two black units holding the field, Seymour decided to form a new line farther
to the rear and withdraw his other units, which left the 54th and 1st NCCV
terribly exposed to the Confederate fire. With their comrades pulling back,
there was nothing left for them to do but to withdraw in good order.

The casualties reported by the three black units at Olustee
tell the tale better than any eyewitness account ever could. The 54th lost 13
men killed, 65 wounded, and 8 missing. The 1st NCCV (which had officially been
redesignated the 35th USCT, yet still clung to its old name) lost 22 killed,
131 wounded, and 77 missing. And, finally, the poor 8th USCT lost 49 killed,
188 wounded, and 73 missing. The Federals as whole would lose 26.5% of their
men, making Olustee proportionally the third bloodiest battle of the entire
war.

To make matter worse, Olustee was one of the many sanguinary
fights in which the Confederates committed atrocities after the fighting had
ended.

William Frederick Penniman of the 4th Georgia Cavalry leaves
the following account:

In passing over the field, and the road ran centering
through it, my attention was first attracted to the bodies of the yankees,
invariably stripped, shoes first and clothing next. Their white bodies looked
ghastly enough, but I particularly notice that firing seemed to be going on in
every direction, until the reports sounded almost frequent enough to resemble
the work of skirmishers. A young officer was standing in the road in front of
me and I asked him, "What is the meaning of all this firing I hear going
on". His reply to me was, "Shooting niggers Sir. "I have tried
to make the boys desist but I can't control them". I made some answer in
effect that it seemed horrible to kill the wounded devils, and he again
answered, "That's so Sir, but one young fellow over yonder told me the
niggers killed his brother after being wounded, at Fort Billow, and he was
twenty three years old, that he had already killed nineteen and needed only
four more to make the matter even, so I told him to go ahead and finis the
job". I rode on but the firing continued. The next morning I had occasion
to go over the battle field again quite early, before the burial squads began
their work, when the results of the shooting of the previous night became quite
apparent. Negroes, and plenty of them, whom I had seen lying all over the field
wounded, and as far as I could see, many of them moving around from palace to
place, now without a motion, all were dead. If a negro had a shot in the shin
another was sure to be in the head.

The defeat at Olustee ended the Union’s effort to organize a
loyal Florida government in time for the 1864 election. Jacksonville would
remain in Union hands until the end of the war, although the cost for such a
gain was incredibly steep. Still, the positive long-term gains achieved after
Olustee can be attributed in large part to the African American soldiers who
fought and bled there 150 years ago this week.

“Jimmy's book is excellent and highly recommended! …The honor was mine in being able to work with this fine author.” - Don Troiani, Historical Artist

“Thanks to Mr. Price’s diligent research, students of the war finally have a volume that details one of the most important, if not the most important, moments in United States African American military history.” - Jim Lighthizer, President, Civil War Trust

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Disclaimer

The views expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not reflect those of any group, organization, or institution.

About Me

Jimmy Price is a Museum Education Specialist with the US Army Women's Museum. An Air Force veteran, he received his M.A. in Military History from Norwich University in 2009. His first book, The Battle of NewMarket Heights: Freedom Will Be Theirs by the Sword, was published in 2011. The Journal of Southern History claims “this slim volume offers considerable insight regarding the black military experience.” His second book, The Battle of First Deep Bottom was released to critical acclaim in 2014. Jimmy writes about different aspects of military history on his blogs Freedom by the Sword: A Historian’s Journey through the American Civil War Era andOver There: Blogging the AEF and WWI. He has contributed essays to A Companion to the Meuse-Argonne Campaign (edited by Edward G. Lengel), Hallowed Groundmagazine, and the International Encyclopedia of the First World War. He lives in Fredericksburg, Virginia with his wife and three children.